Michael Chauff and a Southern Seaplane Cessna.
transition into Southern's straight-float and amphibiousseaplanes.
Over the years Southern Seaplane has found it difficult to locate pilots with the training and experience tooperate safely and efficiently in southern Louisiana'sunique seaplane environment. Pilots contend dailywith shallow salt water, narrow canals, lots of boat traffic, and unusual docking situations-oil rigs, tugboats,and barges. Lyle Panepinto's answer was to grow thepilots internally.
He's had good experience hiring young college graduates with aviation
degrees and professional flight training,and he is especiallycomplimentary ofLouisiana Tech's
graduates.The new hires
begin with the checkruns, flying company-owned Cessna210s and 206s (all onwheels-no floats).On VFR days theyfly single pilot.When conditions
dictate IFR, theyride with an experienced pilot, observing from the right
seat on the Part 135 legs, and flyingfrom the left seat onPart 91 legs. Once they have logged 1,200 hours totaltime, they are cleared to fly single-pilot IFR Part 135trips. That's the first upgrade.
As they draw close to that 1,200-hour landmark, theyalso become eligible for the second part of Southern'spilot development program. "Now we teach them to flya floatplane," Panepinto says. Transitioning to floatsmeans completing a formal, structured training regimenunder the supervision of Southern's experienced seaplane instructors, led by Panepinto.
The training includes two to three months of groundschool and flight training. "We turn them loose whenthey are able to complete a set of tasks-48 of them,"Panepinto explains. The tasks cover docking proceduresand floatplane flying techniques. Here's a sample of
The course to a successfulcareer as an airline pilotcan take some interesting vectors. Take MichaelChauff. He enrolled in Louisiana Tech Univer
sity's professional aviation degree program, with aminor in aviation management. His goals were typical:graduate, build time and experience, and then somedayfly for an airline, preferably Republic. Today, nearlythree years after graduating, he's still in the buildingexperience phase, but with a twist-he's now gettingthat experience by flyingseaplanes.
I met Chauff at Southern Seaplane Inc., a commercial seaplane operator based in Belle
Chasse, Louisiana,on the west bank
of the MississippiRiver just outsideNew Orleans.
Southern Seaplanewas founded in 1954
by Phil Panepinto toserve the burgeoning oil industry insouth Louisiana.
Panepinto usedfloa tplanes to flycustomers directlyto oil drilling rigsthat rise from the
flat, soggy marshland that defines the
southernmost region of the state.Southern still services inland oil rigs, but it also takes
New Orleans-area tourists and conventioneers on float
plane sightseeing flights, and it has contracts to delivercancelled checks to various Louisiana and Mississippicities. Check hauling was Chauff's entry to Southern.
After graduating from Louisiana Tech and instructing at a few area flight schools, Chauff heard from afriend who worked for Southern Seaplane that the company was looking for pilots for its afternoon check runs.In January 2006 he interviewed with Lyle Panepinto,Phil's son who now owns the company. Southern hiredhim a few months later.
Thus began his journey through Southern's in-housepilot development program. After flying cancelledchecks for a year to build experience, Chauff could
Floatplane lessonsA career course over land and sea By Mark Tlvombly
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what the student must demonstrate in dock
ing: laying alongside a dock; crosswindapproaches to nose-in docking; normal,downwind, and upwind approaches; crewboat tie-ups; piling tie-ups; how to tie up toa boat that is adrift; sailing or backing intoa bank; and tying up in a current.
For seaplane flying techniques, studentsmust show that they can safely performsuch maneuvers as 90-degree step turns;crosswind landings in 20-knot-plus winds;downwind takeoffs and landings; turningthe aircraft 180 degrees when taxiingdownwind; negotiating a narrow canal;and rig calls (flying to and docking at anoil rig), including in rough water. Thetasks amount to a set of practical test standards that, when demonstrated success
fully, clear a pilot to fly a SouthernSeaplane floatplane.
When we talked, Chauff was just aboutto complete his transition into commercialfloatplane flying. "I've enjoyed all the training," he says, adding that some of the docking procedures were a little tough to master.
Southern's training, upgrade, and line-flying program gives pilots solid experience incross-country, IFR, and commercial operations in both land and seaplanes. Moreimportant, it instills the kind of informeddecision-making and judgment that willserve pilots like Chauff well throughouttheir careers.
For example, an important part of thetraining is embracing Panepinto's selfdescribed "Golden Rules" of floatplane flying. The rules speak to the many differencesbetween flying a landplane off paved runways versus taking off and landing on water.One of his never-forget rules is to alwayslook for a way to take off from a location
before landing there. In other words, youmay be able to land in one spot but, becauseof winds or some other factor, you may haveto take off someplace else-and you betterhave that "someplace else" picked outbefore landing.
It's a lesson Chauff had just learned."Yesterday we landed in a canal," he told
me, "and I had to taxi for two miles to getto a longer takeoff area." ~
Mark Twombly is a writer and editor who has
been flying since 1968. He is a commercial
pilot with instrument and multiengine ratings
and co-owner of a Piper Aztec.